Red-White Power Relations and Justice in the Courts of Seventeenth-Century New England

Recently, there has been considerable disagreement over how well or badly Puritan magistrates treated Native Americans who appeared before them. No one has, however, systematically compared, colony by colony, the penalties assessed red and white offenders who committed similar seventeenth-century cr...

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Main Author: Koehler, Lyle
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: eScholarship, University of California 1979
Subjects:
Online Access:https://escholarship.org/uc/item/1vn9x8p0
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spelling ftcdlib:oai:escholarship.org:ark:/13030/qt1vn9x8p0 2023-08-20T03:59:01+02:00 Red-White Power Relations and Justice in the Courts of Seventeenth-Century New England Koehler, Lyle 1979-09-01 application/pdf https://escholarship.org/uc/item/1vn9x8p0 unknown eScholarship, University of California qt1vn9x8p0 https://escholarship.org/uc/item/1vn9x8p0 CC-BY-NC American Indian Culture and Research Journal , vol 3, iss 4 Puritan legal policies punishment red offenders development New England racist unfairness article 1979 ftcdlib 2023-07-31T18:02:07Z Recently, there has been considerable disagreement over how well or badly Puritan magistrates treated Native Americans who appeared before them. No one has, however, systematically compared, colony by colony, the penalties assessed red and white offenders who committed similar seventeenth-century crimes. Nor do most observers recognize that European dealings with the Indians constituted a dynamic, changing reality that depended significantly on how secure the early whites considered themselves from any native threat. This essay will attempt to describe how Puritan legal policies toward and punishment of red offenders developed variously throughout southern New England, with particular reference to that issue. Although the New England colonies dealt with Indians in a far from uniform manner, we shall see that white men generally exhibited considerable fairness only when they believed that their safety was at stake. They demonstrated an ethnocentric and, by late century, even racist unfairness once they had achieved some dominion over the Native American peoples around them. When that point was reached, the sentences Calvinist justices handed down to red and white offenders reveal remarkable differences. In the earliest years of white settlement, it was expedient for the Pilgrim and Puritan newcomers to deal fairly with the Indians. Few in number, these transplanted Europeans could hardly afford to alienate nearby tribes. Although the Massachusetts, the Pennacook confederacy of what would become New Hampshire, the Abenaki of Maine, and the Cape Cod residents had been decimated by epidemics from 1616 to 1619, the Narragansetts to the south and Pequots to the west could still muster sizable contingents of warriors. Even the Massachusetts and Wampanoags, despite heavy losses, collectively outnumbered the early English. Article in Journal/Newspaper abenaki University of California: eScholarship
institution Open Polar
collection University of California: eScholarship
op_collection_id ftcdlib
language unknown
topic Puritan legal policies
punishment
red offenders
development
New England
racist unfairness
spellingShingle Puritan legal policies
punishment
red offenders
development
New England
racist unfairness
Koehler, Lyle
Red-White Power Relations and Justice in the Courts of Seventeenth-Century New England
topic_facet Puritan legal policies
punishment
red offenders
development
New England
racist unfairness
description Recently, there has been considerable disagreement over how well or badly Puritan magistrates treated Native Americans who appeared before them. No one has, however, systematically compared, colony by colony, the penalties assessed red and white offenders who committed similar seventeenth-century crimes. Nor do most observers recognize that European dealings with the Indians constituted a dynamic, changing reality that depended significantly on how secure the early whites considered themselves from any native threat. This essay will attempt to describe how Puritan legal policies toward and punishment of red offenders developed variously throughout southern New England, with particular reference to that issue. Although the New England colonies dealt with Indians in a far from uniform manner, we shall see that white men generally exhibited considerable fairness only when they believed that their safety was at stake. They demonstrated an ethnocentric and, by late century, even racist unfairness once they had achieved some dominion over the Native American peoples around them. When that point was reached, the sentences Calvinist justices handed down to red and white offenders reveal remarkable differences. In the earliest years of white settlement, it was expedient for the Pilgrim and Puritan newcomers to deal fairly with the Indians. Few in number, these transplanted Europeans could hardly afford to alienate nearby tribes. Although the Massachusetts, the Pennacook confederacy of what would become New Hampshire, the Abenaki of Maine, and the Cape Cod residents had been decimated by epidemics from 1616 to 1619, the Narragansetts to the south and Pequots to the west could still muster sizable contingents of warriors. Even the Massachusetts and Wampanoags, despite heavy losses, collectively outnumbered the early English.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Koehler, Lyle
author_facet Koehler, Lyle
author_sort Koehler, Lyle
title Red-White Power Relations and Justice in the Courts of Seventeenth-Century New England
title_short Red-White Power Relations and Justice in the Courts of Seventeenth-Century New England
title_full Red-White Power Relations and Justice in the Courts of Seventeenth-Century New England
title_fullStr Red-White Power Relations and Justice in the Courts of Seventeenth-Century New England
title_full_unstemmed Red-White Power Relations and Justice in the Courts of Seventeenth-Century New England
title_sort red-white power relations and justice in the courts of seventeenth-century new england
publisher eScholarship, University of California
publishDate 1979
url https://escholarship.org/uc/item/1vn9x8p0
genre abenaki
genre_facet abenaki
op_source American Indian Culture and Research Journal , vol 3, iss 4
op_relation qt1vn9x8p0
https://escholarship.org/uc/item/1vn9x8p0
op_rights CC-BY-NC
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